Alfred Tibor

Alfred Tibor

Alfred Tibor (born February 10, 1920) is a Holocaust survivor and sculptor. His artwork can be found in nearly 500 private collections and museums throughout the world, including the Yad Vashem memorial in Jerusalem.

Tibor's life

Tibor was born Alfred Goldstein in Konyar, Hungary in 1920.

In high school, he became a self-taught talented gymnast. He was not allowed formal training because he was Jewish. He said the discrimination he faced made him train harder and work to be the best. "The more they were pushing me down and degrading me, the more I wanted to be better than others," he said. "I wanted to prove it: I am not a dirty Jew; I am a boy, and I have ambition." Tibor eventually qualified for the Hungarian team for the 1936 Summer Olympics, but when he went to register for the team, he was denied when the team discovered he was Jewish. Tibor was not allowed to compete as a member of the Hungarian team in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. [ [http://www.ohiodominican.edu/about/news/2003/Alfred_Tibor.asp Life of the Mind Presents Alfred Tibor] , Ohio Dominican University, October 14, 2003, accessed May 10, 2006.] "I was kicked out. I was kicked out because I was Jewish," Tibor said. "That time, the sky was falling apart." ["Man who survived Holocaust learned how to overcome hate" by Jennifer Nesbitt, The Newark Advocate, Mar 23, 2007.]

In 1940 Tibor was forced to be a slave laborer for a Hungarian Army labor battalion. Eventually he was captured by the Soviet Army and spent six years as a prisoner in a Siberian prison camp. Of the 273 men in his labor battalion sent to the prisoner-of-war camp, he was only one of two to survive. [ [http://www.goldenbuckeye.com/hof/2005.html#Tibor Ohio Department of Aging] Golden Buckeye 2005 Hall of Fame inductees biography, accessed May 10, 2006] Tibor credits "luck and determination" for his survival. [ [http://www.alfredtibor.net/ Alfred Tibor's personal site,] "History of a Holocaust Survivor," accessed Feb. 11, 2007.]

Tibor was freed from the camp in 1947. It was then that he discovered that, of his family of 37 immediate people (and 82 other relatives), [ [http://www.dispatch.com/news/religion/faith-story.php?story=dispatch/2006/04/21/20060421-C3-01.html "Two events will recall Holocaust"] by Felix Hoover, "The Columbus Dispatch", April 21, 2006, accessed May 10, 2006.] only he and his brother Andre had survived both the Holocaust and the war. Tibor and his brother changed their last name to Tibor to honor their older brother, Tibor Goldstein, who was executed in another prison camp. [ [http://www.ohiodominican.edu/about/news/2003/Alfred_Tibor.asp Life of the Mind Presents Alfred Tibor] , Ohio Dominican University, October 14, 2003, accessed May 10, 2006.]

Tibor moved to Budapest and worked for nine years as a government exhibition designer. In 1956, two months after the Hungarian Revolution, he fled the country with his wife and two children because he feared a return of anti-Semetic sentiment. [ [http://www.ohiodominican.edu/about/news/2003/Alfred_Tibor.asp Life of the Mind Presents Alfred Tibor] , Ohio Dominican University, October 14, 2003, accessed May 10, 2006.] They emigrated to the United States in 1957, where he worked as a commercial artist in Miami for 16 years until moving to Columbus, Ohio, to pursue sculpture full time.

Tibor's sculptures

Tibor has stated that be believes he did not lose his life during the Holocaust and World War II so he could eventually create art to capture and evoke human emotions. "Art for art’s sake is not enough," he has said. [ [http://www.goldenbuckeye.com/hof/2005.html#Tibor Ohio Department of Aging] Golden Buckeye 2005 Hall of Fame inductees biography, accessed May 10, 2006]

Tibor's first commissioned sculpture was completed in 1974. Today his work can now be found in nearly 500 private collections and museums while his large outdoor statues can be seen in Ohio and around the world. Among the locations of his statues are the Yad Vashem memorial in Jerusalem, Batelle Memorial Park (Columbus), Trinity Lutheran Seminary (Ohio), the Ohio Governor’s mansion, the Arthur James Hospital and Research Institute, and the Indianapolis Jewish Center in Indianapolis, Indiana. [ [http://www.trinitylutheranseminary.edu/HomePage/MemorialInformation.pdf Brochure about Tibor's "Promise for Life" sculpture] , Trinity Lutheran Seminary, accessed may 10, 2006.] [ [http://www.ohioana.org/awards/2005/pegasus2005.asp Ohioana Pegasus Award: 2005] Biography of Tibor, accessed May 10, 2006.]

His most recent sculpture, "Zahor" (meaning "Remembrance" in Hebrew) was commissioned for [http://www.agudasachim.org Congregation Agudas Achim] in Bexley, Ohio, where he is a member. ["Tibor's 'Zahor' sculpture will be dedicated April 24" by Ina Horwitz-Whitmore, "ThisWeek Newspaper", April 13, 2006.] The 9-foot-tall bronze sculpture shows German soldiers herding victims into a concentration camp gas chamber while above a survivor climbs out of the smokestack holding an Israeli flag. Behind the sculpture is a granite map showing the locations of all the concentration camps in Europe. The work also features a poem written by American poet Emma Lazarus predicting the establishment of the State of Israel. [ [http://www.dispatch.com/news/religion/faith-story.php?story=dispatch/2006/04/21/20060421-C3-01.html "Two events will recall Holocaust"] by Felix Hoover, "The Columbus Dispatch", April 21, 2006, accessed May 10, 2006.]

Awards

Tibor has received a lifetime achievement award from the Liturgical Art Guild, an Arts Freedom Award, and has been inducted into the Ohio Senior Citizens Hall of Fame. He also won a 2005 Ohioana Pegasus Award. [ [http://www.ohioana.org/awards/2005/pegasus2005.asp Ohioana Pegasus Award: 2005, Alfred Tibor of Columbus OH] , Ohioana Library, accessed August 9, 2007.]

References

External links

* [http://www.alfredtibor.net/ Alfred Tibor's personal site]
* [http://www.sculpturecenter.org/oosi/artistlist.asp?A1LN=Tibor&A1FN=Alfred&A1MN= Sculpture Center information on four Tibor sculptures]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Alfred Reynolds — (Reinhold Alfréd), né le 13 décembre 1907 à Budapest, en Hongrie et mort en 1993 à Londres, était un romancier, essayiste anglais et un poète d expression hongroise. Sommaire 1 Biographie 2 Les ouvrages …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Tibor Rado — Tibor Radó (* 2. Juni 1895 in Budapest; † 12. Dezember 1965 in New Smyrna Beach, Florida) war ein ungarischer Mathematiker, bekannt für seine Arbeiten über Minimalflächen und Turingmaschinen. Leben Radó nahm an der Universität Budapest ein… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tibor Szász — (Tibor Szasz, Szasz Tibor) (* 1948 in Siebenbürgen) ist Pianist, Musikwissenschaftler und Musikpädagoge. Musikalische Ausbildung / Studium Tibor Szász wurde 1948 als Sohn ungarischer Eltern in Siebenbürgen geboren und erhielt im Alter von vier… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tibor Szász — is a pianist and author of essays on musicological questions and performance practice related to Liszt, Mozart and Beethoven. Prof. Dr. Tibor Szász is Professor of Piano at the Hochschule für Musik in Freiburg, Germany at the University of Music …   Wikipedia

  • Tibor Radó — (* 2. Juni 1895 in Budapest; † 12. Dezember 1965 in New Smyrna Beach, Florida) war ein ungarischer Mathematiker, bekannt für seine Arbeiten über Minimalflächen und Turingmaschinen. Leben Tibor Radó ging in Budapest zur Schule und nahm 1913 an der …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tibor Balázs — (né le 13 avril 1958 à Cimpia Turzii en Roumanie est un poète, traducteur, essayiste docteur en littérature , directeur de maison d édition. Fils de pasteur protestant hongrois et de mère hongroise il fait ses études secondaires et universitaires …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Alfred Hajos — Alfréd Hajós Alfréd Hajós Alfréd Hajós lors des J.O. d Athènes en 1896 Contexte général Sport pratiqué Natation Période active Fin du …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Alfréd Rényi Institute of Mathematics — Rényi Alfréd Matematikai Kutatóintézet Established 1950 (1950) Field of Research mathematics Director Péter Pál Pálfy …   Wikipedia

  • Tibor Sárai — (* 10. Mai 1919 in Budapest; † 1995) war ein ungarischer Komponist. Sárai war Schüler von Pál Kadosa. Er war Leiter der Musikabteilung beim ungarischen Ministerium für Volksbildung, von 1950 bis 1953 Leiter der Musikabteilung des ungarischen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tibor Tolnay — (* 6. Juli 1932 in Oradea, dt. Großwardein; † 28. Oktober 2009 ebenda) war ein Maler und Grafiker des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts. Er gehörte zur Volksgruppe der Magyaren in Rumänien. Leben und Werk Zwischen 1947 und 1949 war er Schüler des Malers… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”